期刊文献+

Do increasing respiratory costs explain the decline with age of forest growth rate? 被引量:4

下载PDF
导出
摘要 Once forests have achieved a full canopy, their growth rate declines progressively with age. This work used a global data set with estimates from a wide range of forest types, aged 20-795 years, of their annual photosynthetic production(gross primary production, GPP) and subsequent above-plus below-ground biomass production(net primary production, NPP). Both GPP and NPP increased with increasing mean annual temperature and precipitation. GPP was then unrelated to forest age whilst NPP declined progressively with increasing age. These results implied that autotrophic respiration increases with age. It has been proposed that GPP should decline in response to increasing water stress in leaves as water is raised to greater heights as trees grow taller with age. However, trees may make substantial plastic adjustment in mor phology and anatomy of newly developing leaves, xylem and fi ne roots to compensate for this stress and maintain GPP with age. This work reviews the possibilities that NPP declines with age as respiratory costsincrease progressively in, any or all of, the construction and maintenance of more complex tissues, the maintenance of increasing amounts of live tissue within the sapwood of stems and coarse roots, the conversion of sapwood to hear twood, the increasing distance of phloem transport, increased turnover rates of fine roots, cost of supporting very tall trees that are unable to compensate fully for increased water stress in their canopies or maintaining alive competitively unsuccessful small trees.
作者 P.W.West
机构地区 Forest research centre
出处 《Journal of Forestry Research》 SCIE CAS CSCD 2020年第3期693-712,共20页 林业研究(英文版)
  • 相关文献

参考文献1

二级参考文献87

  • 1Nowak RS, EIIsworth DS, Smith SD (2004). Functional responses of plants to elevated atmospheric CO2: do photosynthetic and productivity data from FACE experiments support eady predictions? New Phytol. 162, 253-280.
  • 2Oren R, EIIsworth DS, Johnsen KH, Phillips N, Ewers BE, Maier C et al. (2001). Soil fertility limits carbon sequestration by forest ecosystems in a CO2-enriched atmosphere. Nature 411, 469- 472.
  • 3Paw UK, Falk M, Suchanek TH, Ustin SL, Chen J, Park YS et al. (2004). Carbon dioxide exchange between an old-growth forest and the atmosphere. Ecosystems 7, 513-524.
  • 4Phillips N, Barbour M, Dawson T (2007). Casting light on nocturnal stomatal conductance: a special issue of tree physiology. Tree Physiol. 27, 551-639.
  • 5Phillips N, Bond B J, McDowell NG, Ryan MG (2002). Canopy and hydraulic conductance in young, mature, and old Douglas-fir trees. Tree Physiol. 22, 205-211.
  • 6Phillips N, Oren R, Licata J, Linder S (2004). Time series diagnosis of tree hydraulic characteristics. Tree Physiol. 24, 879-890.
  • 7Phillips N, Ryan MG, Bond B J, McDowell NG, Hinckley TM, Cermak J (2003). Reliance on stored water increases with tree size in three species in the Pacific Northwest. Tree Physiol. 23, 237-245.
  • 8Polley HW, Johnson HG, Johnson HS (1992). Growth and gas exchange of oats (Avena sativa) and wild mustard (Brassica kaber) at subambient CO2 concentrations. Int. J. Plant Sci. 15, 453-461.
  • 9Polley HW, Johnson HG, Marino BD, Mayeux HS (1993). Increase in C3 plant water-use efficiency and biomass over glacial to present CO2 concentrations. Nature 361, 61-63.
  • 10Pregitzer KS, Euskirchen ES (2004). Carbon cycling and storage in world forests: biome patterns related to forest age. Glob. Change Biol. 10, 2052-2077.

共引文献2

同被引文献33

引证文献4

二级引证文献3

相关作者

内容加载中请稍等...

相关机构

内容加载中请稍等...

相关主题

内容加载中请稍等...

浏览历史

内容加载中请稍等...
;
使用帮助 返回顶部